PDF
version of: This
Article (67KB) | This
Issue (672KB)
|
|
||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
We hope that the narratives in First Person Accounts will evoke an understanding of how people experience gambling. These experiences may come from gamblers, from family or friends of gamblers, and may be positive or negative. We invite others to share their experiences as First Person Accounts or to a dialogue in our Letters to the Editor. First Person Account An Opinion
Copyright (c) 2000 CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) All Rights reserved. Dot-com looniness, phantoms of avarice and appetite.by Rex Murphy
Excerpted from the Magazine portion of CBC News THE NATIONAL television broadcast for April 17, 2000.
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Biographical NotesRex Murphy was born and raised in St. Johns, Newfoundland, graduating from Memorial University. A Rhodes Scholar, in l968 he went to Oxford University. Once back in Newfoundland he was soon established as a quick-witted and accomplished writer, broadcaster and teacher. He is noted throughout Newfoundland for his biting comments on the political scene through his nightly television supper hour show "Here and Now." Rex has worked extensively with CBC and from Newfoundland he has contributed many items on current affairs issues, including a weekly essay for THE NATIONAL, winning several national and provincial broadcasting awards. He divides his week between Toronto and Montreal with frequent forays to St. Johns.
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
||
issue
2 august 2000![]() |
intro
| feature | opinion
| research | service
profile | first person accounts
| review | letters
| calendar | archive
| submissions | links
Copyright © 1999-2001 The
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Editorial Contact:
Subscribe to our automated
announcement list:
.
Unsubscribe:
This page was last updated on Wednesday, March 22, 2000 10:37 PM